Snake Covered In 500 Paralysis Ticks Rescued From Pool

If you've ever fallen victim to a tick, you'll know just how annoying they can be. Once they've gotten you, your leg will be red and itchy for the day. The same applies to our furry friends who get bitten, though it usually takes us far longer to notice.

Now imagine falling victim to not one tick, but 500. Yes, 500. Tony Harrison from Gold Coast and Brisbane Snake Catcher was recently called to extract a carpet python from the pool of a home in Coolangatta on the Gold Coast, Australia, on Thursday.

And when he got close to the reptile, he was shocked to discover that it was covered in hundreds of paralysis ticks. Here's what that looks like up close, by the way.

University of Queensland Professor of Parasitology Stephen Barker told ABC that the ticks are known as reptile ticks, and are fairly common. But to have so many on one snake is unusual.

"We can't help but wonder if the snake is already sick or old … they have lower immune response to parasites, so you do tend to find a lot of ticks on sick animals."

Professor Barker said that he spotted a mix of adult males and females latched on from the photographs. "The male ticks have probably been attached there for months," he said. "They don't really take much of a meal, they're waiting there for a female."

"Once she's fed she releases a pheromone that says, 'I'm here', and then the males will detach and they'll go and mate with the female.

"She'll drop off and lay her eggs, and the male will just stay there. They might stay there their entire life until they're completely worn out or too old, then die."

Barker believes that the snake may have been in the pool in an attempt to drown the annoying ticks, though "it would take maybe 10 or 12 hours," he said.